What is the difference between intellectual property rights and trademarks?

Intellectual property refers to the right to possess, use, dispose of and benefit from the fruits of intellectual labor according to law. Intellectual property is an intangible property, which, like tangible property such as houses and automobiles, is protected by national laws and has value and use value. The value of some major patents, well-known trademarks or works is much higher than tangible property such as houses and cars. Intellectual property is the ownership of the fruits of intellectual labor. It is an exclusive right granted to qualified authors, inventors or owners of achievements in a certain period of time according to the laws of various countries. There are two kinds of intellectual property rights: one is copyright and the other is industrial property rights. Copyright refers to the right of the copyright owner to sign, publish, use, license others to use and get remuneration for his literary works; Industrial property right is the exclusive right including invention patent, utility model patent, design patent, trademark, service mark, name of manufacturer, name of goods source or name of origin. Trademark is a legal term, which is adopted by producers and operators in their production, manufacturing, processing, selection or distribution of goods or services. In order to distinguish the source of goods or services and have obvious characteristics, it is generally composed of words, graphics or their combinations. A trademark approved for registration by the state is a "registered trademark" and is protected by law. Trademark registrants enjoy the exclusive right to use trademarks. Intellectual property rights include trademark rights.